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13967

Chronic Hepatitis C Treatment: A Systematic Review

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Last updated: 03 Jan 2025

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Abstract

Background: Chronic hepatitis C (CHC) infection affects almost 3% of the global population and can lead to cirrhosis, liver failure, and hepatocellular carcinoma in a significant number of those infected. Thus, there is a complelling need to develop and introduce new therapeutics with a direct-acting antiviral effect in order to target various stages of the HCV lifecycle for HCV  eradication without concomitant interferon.
Study Objective: to provide treatment recommendations for chronic HCV for specialists and generalists based on published evidence.
Methods: A literature search of Web of Science, Scopus, Embase, Agricola, Cochrane Library, Cinahl Plus, Google Scholar, and Oaister was conducted from 1990 to 2016, records were filtered according to the  Inclusion criteria and 27 hits were yielded.
Results: Hepatitis C virus genotype 1 is more difficult to cure than genotype 2 or genotype 3. Patients with HCV genotype 1 should receive treatment with sofosbuvir + pegylated interferon + ribavirin because of the shorter duration of therapy and high rates of SVR (89%-90%). Simeprevir + pegylated interferon + ribavirin is an alternative for patients with HCV genotype 1 (SVR, 79%-86%). Patients with HCV genotypes 2 and 3 should receive therapy with sofosbuvir + ribavirin alone (SVR for genotype 2, 12 weeks' duration: 82%-93%; SVR for genotype 3, 24 weeks' duration, 80%-95%). Patients with HIV-HCV coinfection and patients with compensated cirrhosis (ie, cirrhosis but preserved synthetic liver function) should receive the same treatment as HCV-monoinfected patients. Conclusion: A growing body of evidence suggests that recently developed HCV combined treatment modalities have transformed chronic HCV into a routinely curable disease being relatively available and well tolerated ,which can potentially reduce the need for liver transplantation and reduce HCV-related mortality. Treatment protocol for genotype1 is based on a combined regimen of Pegylated interferons with ribavirin and sofosbuvir or simeprevir while Sofosbuvir with ribavirin alone should be used to treat patients infected with HCV genotypes 2 and 3. Patients coinfected with human immunodefiency virus and HCV genotype 1 should be treated for HCV with pegylated interferons, ribavirin, and sofosbuvir by a physician with experience in treating this particular group of patients and familiar with potential drug interactions.
 

Keywords

hepatitis C, Treatment, SVR, HCV genotype, simeprevir, Ribavirin

Authors

First Name

Aishah Mohammed

Last Name

Alenezi

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Northern Border University

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Abdulaziz Hassan Mohammed

Last Name

Al-Fakih

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Hadhramout University

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Sultan Mohammed

Last Name

Al-Afif

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Hadhramout University

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Abdulkarem Mohammed

Last Name

Al-Afif

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Hadhramout University

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Bashayer Abbas

Last Name

Habib

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Almaarefa Colleges

Email

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City

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Orcid

-

Volume

67

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

2711

Issue Date

2017-04-01

Receive Date

2018-09-17

Publish Date

2017-04-01

Page Start

305

Page End

313

Print ISSN

1687-2002

Online ISSN

2090-7125

Link

https://ejhm.journals.ekb.eg/article_13967.html

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https://ejhm.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=13967

Order

3

Type

Original Article

Type Code

606

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine

Publication Link

https://ejhm.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Chronic Hepatitis C Treatment: A Systematic Review

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023